Reviews

Inhibitor Phase by Alastair Reynolds

willrefuge's review against another edition

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4.0

4 / 5 ✪

https://arefugefromlife.wordpress.com/2021/11/21/inhibitor-phase-by-alastair-reynolds-review/

224 years after the reappearance of the Inhibitors, humanity has become an endangered species, hiding in the galaxy’s darkest corners. Miguel de Ruyter lives on the airless world of Michaelmas—a godforsaken, pockmarked world at the edge of known space. Here, hidden in caves deep below the surface, humanity ekes out an existence. Three thousand people call Sun Hollow home, making it the largest known human settlement in space. Though for de Ruyter, it’s the only known human settlement.

But things are about to change.

When de Ruyter heads topside to destroy a colony ship—worried that the Wolves (the Inhibitors) will detect the presence of so many humans, the people of Sun Holloware prepared to destroy the newcomers before the they bring the Wolves down on Michaelmas—he comes away from the ship with a startling discovery. A lone sleeper casket, fortunate to survive the explosion. More fortunate still, the occupant, a woman known only as Glass, seems in good health if rattled by the experience. But when de Ruyter returns her to Sun Hollow all that changes.

It appears that Glass was not the desperate refugee that de Ruyter had taken her for. Within days of landing on Michaelmas, she has the colony on its knees, defenseless before her. They can refuse her nothing, but Glass only wants one thing from Sun Hollow: Miguel de Ruyter.

One man in exchange for the colony. And if de Ruyter agrees to go quietly, they’ll undertake the mystery that Glass came to Michaelmas to solve. The enigma of the Knights of Cydonia, a way to defeat the Inhibitors, a lost world known only as Charybdis, and the long-dead Nevil Clavain.

“Why’d you shoot it?”
I glared at him. “Would you rather I hadn’t shot it?”


On the whole, Inhibitor Phase was an excellent read, just what I was hoping for for my return to the Revelation Space universe. I’ve only read the opening novel, Revelation Space, which only just hints at the wolves’ existence—but I still found this a satisfying continuation of the universe. Additionally, I think that new readers won’t have to hard of time of things. Inhibitor Phase doesn’t throw you in the deep end; instead building the universe from the ground up from the safety of an isolated haven before introducing the universe and history at large. If you’re a fan of the series you’ll probably know all these things already, but shouldn’t be too put off by the amount of hand-holding it does in the opening Part One.

Inhibitor Phase is written in first-person POV, and told over seven distinct Parts, which take place over a total of about 60 years. There’s a helpful glossary and timeline at the end, as well as a list of key characters and note on chronology. I used these all the time to square what I remembered with what I was being told—and it’s an incredibly helpful detail to have along. The events within are set after most of what happens in Absolution Gap (which I’ve heard is depressing), and while the tone isn’t completely positive, it’s certainly more so than not at all.

I thoroughly enjoyed my time with Inhibitor Phase! The story flows along really nicely after it departs Sun Hollow, and I had absolutely no problem getting along with the story. It reads quick and to the point, with a bit of flair, a bit of drama, and a bit of pace. In all honesty, I think it could get away with being 50% longer. I actually kinda felt that it glossed over some things in the interest of time; things that could’ve really become an adventure all in their own right instead of a footnote in another. But I know why it was done this way, and it’s really quite a good read the way it was written. But the best stories always leave you wanting more, and that’s what Reynolds does here. The plot flows quite nicely, with barely an issue—until the events of Part 6 (which will remain nameless in anticipation of spoilers). Then it takes some interesting license. And the story loses some of its cohesion. And don’t get me started on the ending. So… I know what they were trying to do. It all makes sense, in general, generally, on the whole. But explicitly… I have no idea what was going on. Everything just starts leaping all over the place.

While Inhibitor Phase is somewhat of a serious book—I mean, it has to do with the possible extinction or survival of humanity—it’s not without its fair share of humor. Which I found… good, I guess? Funny. Entertaining. Reynolds doesn’t do humor like Andy Weir. Or like Peter F. Hamilton. Or like Becky Chambers. Like so many other authors out there, he has his own peculiar brand of humor which you’ll either like or hate, either have to get used to or won’t.

“It isn’t as bad as it sounds.”
“You’re not stupid, and I’m reasonably sure you’re not suicidal. Explain how this helps us.”
“Good—at least you’re being open-minded. The fact is, we’re only considering a brief dip into the photosphere of the star: barely different to skimming the atmosphere of a planet.”
“Except it’s a star.”
“Don’t get too hung up on that. The photosphere is merely a transitional zone where the mean free paths for photon collisions undergo a large change. From Scythe’s point of view, it will be no different to moving from plasma environment to a somewhat denser, more excited environment containing the same plasma.”
“Except it’s star,” I repeated.


TL;DR

Inhibitor Phase continues the Revelation Space Universe and Inhibitor Sequence Arcs in a very different way than the previous de facto concluding Absolution Gap (which, to be fair, I haven’t read but I’ve heard many things about—mostly that it’s depressing). Inhibitor Phase is a serious book, but there’s humor in it too. In fact, if the survival of humanity wasn’t at stake, I’d class it as a story about adventure, or a mystery to to solved. And solve it it does—to a quite satisfying degree over the course of its 7 separate Parts, 34 chapters and 450-odd pages. While a little artistic and scientific license is taken at the end, on the whole this is an immensely entertaining, satisfying read that I have no issue recommending to both old-timers and those new to Revelation Space. And I can’t wait to see where the series goes from here!

morninglightmountain's review against another edition

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adventurous medium-paced
  • Plot- or character-driven? A mix
  • Strong character development? It's complicated
  • Loveable characters? Yes
  • Diverse cast of characters? Yes
  • Flaws of characters a main focus? It's complicated

4.5

darkbackground's review against another edition

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adventurous dark hopeful medium-paced
  • Plot- or character-driven? A mix
  • Strong character development? No
  • Loveable characters? No
  • Diverse cast of characters? Yes
  • Flaws of characters a main focus? Yes

4.0

jahoffmn's review against another edition

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medium-paced

4.25

dbonilla0's review against another edition

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adventurous mysterious slow-paced

4.0

karinlib's review against another edition

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4.0

I'm not quite ready to write a review, except that this entry in this was so dreamlike
Spoiler nightmarish, but in the end, hope for humankind
As always, the technology and science is fascinating, and the Reynolds ideas are really interesting.

themanfromdelmonte's review

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3.0

I downloaded this on Kindle on the back of quoted reviews on Amazon e.g.
“Pirates in space, full of peril and high-jinks... This is a novel that's elegantly plotted …”
“This is a story to break hearts and make you turn pages.”
“... the mapping of Age of Sail tropes onto space travel is just the start...”
Nope, didn’t get any of that.
This is a relativistic universe, even the local neighbourhood is vast beyond imagining, but there’s no sense of it here, just climb in the suspended animation casket and off you go. If this is Thursday, this must be AX Microscopii.
The protagonist plods stodgily from one scenario to the next. There’s no real sense of peril or doubt that he’s going to succeed.
Along the way, secondary characters are discarded freely, without a huge amount of distress. Poor old Snowdrop, eh? Still, time to get out of Dodge. Laters!
The pirate theme might refer to the encounter with the Swine Queen (or whatever her name was) at Chasm City I suppose, but then I rather skated over the cannibalistic grossness of that chapter.
There’s a series of flashbacks that add nothing to the story (read Fred Pohl’s ‘Gateway’ to see how this should be done) and a series of reveals that are sadly anti climactic. So the Nestbuilders have been hollowed out by Slugs. But wait! A renegade Slug is onside. *Sigh* I was beyond caring at this point.
I used to love hard SF. Larry Niven was my go-to back in the day. Then it was cyberpunk and William Gibson. Then I came across Lois McMaster Bujold. I think you can see the direction of travel. I’m just an old romantic. Unless I can invest in the characters, I don’t care about the gadgetry and this book is much more about the ‘what’ than the ‘who’. So there’s nothing for me in this book with its hyper-this and its hyper-that.

11corvus11's review against another edition

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4.0

More later!

psyckers's review against another edition

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5.0

This book exhibits all the hallmarks of an epic Sci-fi novel from the acclaimed Alastair Reynolds.
The expansive and exquisitely detailed worlds and characters depicted in this book, is what we are accustomed from this beloved author. This time the pace of the story is considerably quicker than previous novels, with much emphasis on detail of characters, that vastly different to each other.
Likewise the reality of travelling through space towards distant worlds (no such thing as warp drives here, you need to 'reefersleep').
As compelling as the story is, I did feel the ending was a little bit rushed. Nonetheless it is a compelling and satisfying conclusion, though with enough loose ends to feel that a number of books could spawn from this one.

infi85's review against another edition

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adventurous dark informative inspiring fast-paced
  • Plot- or character-driven? A mix
  • Strong character development? Yes
  • Loveable characters? Yes
  • Diverse cast of characters? Yes
  • Flaws of characters a main focus? No

4.25